PREVENT THEM

IMPLEMENTING THEIR

'FINAL SOLUTION' AND

TRIGGERING A WAR

THAT COULD WIPE OUT

THE ENTIRE HUMAN

RACE?

The opening story of the 1984
season continued the anniversary season’s theme of resurrecting monsters
from the show’s past. As the title heavily suggests, Johnny Byrne’s
“Warriors of the Deep” brings back the immensely popular Sea Devils, last
seen on television back in 1972. At the production team’s behest, the Sea
Devils’ Eocene cousins – the Silurians – were also worked into the script
giving fans a sort of ‘ultimate Earth Reptiles’ story. On paper, at least.

I vividly remember watching
this serial on television for the first time and feeling a bit
disenchanted, much in the same way that I did when I first saw “Day of the
Daleks” as well

as many others that I had
‘spoiled’ for myself by reading the Target novelisation first! That

old aphorism still rings true
– if you read the book before you see the film, then you are almost always
going to prefer it, especially with a story like “Warriors of the Deep”
that is let down by a below-par production.

When I originally read
Terrance Dicks’ novelisation, I was very impressed with crew of the sea
base. The characters were all written so very well, particularly those
like Maddox - a young man under unimaginable stress; the fate of the world
literally in his hands – and the conspiring double agents Doctor Solow and
Nilson. However, on television I was not quite as taken with any of them.
Ingrid Pitt, Ian McCulloch, and especially Martin Neil all give admirable
performances, but their costumes and make-up were so preposterous that I
could not take any one of them at all seriously.

Worst of all though was the
Myrka – brilliant on the page; absolutely brilliant. Brilliant on audio
too, for that matter. But on television not so. An unconvincing prop so
new that the paint had not dried and the operator had not even had a chance
to rehearse in equals a recipe for disaster. The rest of the serial’s
design is no better – white corridors throughout, and Eocenes wearing more
clothes than an Inuit come winter. Remember the ‘nude’ Silurians? Here
their torsos are clad in a skin-coloured ‘box’, for want of a better word.
And for the Sea Devils? Full battle armour and daft helmets that obscure
half their monstrous heads! Michael Briant would have been so pleased.

However, like both other
stories released as part of the “Beneath The Surface” DVD box

set, the “Warriors of the
Deep” DVD is at least worth its salt. The disc’s showpiece half-hour
documentary is wryly entitled “The Depths” and charts the making of the
serial as told by those involved. Peter Davison, Janet Fielding, and even
Ian “there are twenty-eight continuity mistakes in this” Levine
each contribute some charming little anecdotes, but for me the two people
at the heart of this production were the writer and the visual effects
designer, Mat Irvine. Something clearly went wrong in the transition
between Byrne’s bold script and the rather jaded production, and it is
poor old Irvine who has had to carry the can for twenty-odd years. But
here he is given the chance to set the record straight, explaining why
“Warriors of the Deep” was not realised as well as it may have been.
Thatcher’s timely call for a general election meant that the serial’s
production had to either be moved forward or scrapped altogether.
Unsurprisingly, producer John “the Myrka is wonderful!”
Nathan-Turner chose the latter option that, with hindsight, may not have
been the right move. A year later on Room 101, BBC One Controller
Michael Grade singled out the Myrka sequence for particular ridicule just
prior to his placing the series on hiatus.

“They Came From Beneath The
Sea” is a twelve minute gentle piss-take of the realisation

of the warriors of the deep,
particularly the Myrka. It strikes me as being profoundly ironic

that this polished CGI
featurette, set entirely within a stunning 3D model of Sea Base Four,
completely contrasts with the hasty and horrendous realisation of the
DVD’s main feature.

The commentary is also
interesting, though as usual the best bits are regurgitated in the
documentaries that I have already mentioned. The rest of the special
features on this disc are more compact, but still quite remarkable. The
four minute selection of trails and continuities include a noteworthy
trailer for the first half of the 1984 season, though I must concede that
this is pulled into sharp focus by the epic trailer for the next classic
DVD release, the classic William Hartnell serial “The Time Meddler”.
“Science In Action” is a

clear product of its time that
sees Irvine interviewed by BBC Schools presenter Kjartan Poskitt about
everything from Sea Devil heads to the eponymous Dragon in “Dragonfire”.
Not my favourite way to spend ten minutes, but certainly a poignant
reminder that “Warriors of the Deep” has not dated anywhere near as badly
as some programmes have.

“There should have been
another way.”

Byrne’s story itself is
actually very, very good and just as relevant today as it was in 1984. The
above quotation encapsulates perfectly the tragedy of the Eocenes, as well
as that of the Doctor. There should have been another way… but there was
not. There never is. Once again the Doctor has that terrible choice to
make, and very skilfully Byrne presents the Doctor with the means to
destroy the Earth Reptiles very early on in the story when he notices the
anti-reptile gas Hexachromite. The gas is there hanging over the Doctor
for the duration of the story. He could save the humans at any time, but
he cannot bring himself to

do it until he has absolutely no
other choice. By the end of the four episodes, you really feel for the
Doctor. And “Warriors of the Deep” is only the beginning for him. Through
“Resurrection of the Daleks” and beyond, things are only going to get
harder and harder for his fifth incarnation.

However, as much as I liked
the story, there were a couple of things that did not sit well with me. The future as shown in this serial is once again pretty miserable;
by 2084 the world is divided into two power blocks, each poised to
annihilate the other. I do not know though – perhaps whittling it down to
just two power blocks is optimistic the way things are going! Perhaps were
it not broadcast so close to the bleak “Frontios”, then this grim future
would not bother me so, but it was and it does. However, my biggest
annoyance with the story was in fact the pathetic cliffhanger ending to
the first episode: the Doctor falls in some water. Three seconds later – I
counted – Turlough declares that “the Doctor’s drowned”. I know
Turlough is the eternal pessimist, but come on! Three seconds?

If the
truth be known though, a lacklustre production and one dodgy cliffhanger
do not detract all that much from an remarkably well-written story. And if
for no other reason, “Warriors of the Deep” has to be watched purely to
witness what I would say is one of Davison’s best televised performances as the Doctor.